A new, special issue of the Keats-Shelley Journal devoted to the topic "Was There a Literary Regency?" is off the presses.

Here are the contents:

"Introduction: Was There a Literary Regency?" by STUART CURRAN
"Was There a Regency Literature? 1816 as a Test Case" by STEPHEN C. BEHRENDT
"1816 as Literary Year: Three Ways of Looking at a Literary Regency" by SONIA HOFKOSH
"The Year of Reaction: 1816 as Janus-Faced" by JERROLD E. HOGLE
"Some Caveats about Postulating a Regency Literature" by TILAR J. MAZZEO
"The Circulation of Satirical Poetry in the Regency" by GARY DYER
"The Print in Regency Print Culture" by STEVEN E. JONES
"Rethinking Regency Literature: The Case of William Cobbett" by MARK KIPPERMAN
"Broken Soldiers: Public Bodies and Next-of-Kin Notification" by SCOTT KRAWCZYK
"Regency Literature? Regency Libel" by CHARLES MAHONEY
"Robert Southey, Historian of El Dorado" by REBECCA NESVET
"'Must the event decide?': Byron and Austen in Search of the Present" by EMILY ROHRBACH
"Pedlars and Prophets: Jewish Representation in the Regency" by MICHAEL SCRIVENER